Multiple meaning systems in the brain: a case for visual semantics.
about
Where is the semantic system? A critical review and meta-analysis of 120 functional neuroimaging studies.Modulation of BOLD response in motion-sensitive lateral temporal cortex by real and fictive motion sentences.A case of prevailing deficit of nonliving categories or a case of prevailing sparing of living categories?Spanish norms for age of acquisition, concept familiarity, lexical frequency, manipulability, typicality, and other variables for 820 words from 14 living/nonliving concepts.The anatomy of language: contributions from functional neuroimaging.How cortical neurons help us see: visual recognition in the human brainNeural correlates of conceptual knowledge for actions.Am I looking at a cat or a dog? Gaze in the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia is subject to excessive taxonomic captureDissociating verbal and nonverbal audiovisual object processing.What are the facts of semantic category-specific deficits? A critical review of the clinical evidence.The organization of the conceptual system: the case of the "object versus action" dimension.Past, present, and prospects: Reflections 40 years on from the selective impairment of semantic memory (Warrington, 1975).'Two categorical stages of object recognition': a retrospective.Selective category and modality effects in deep dyslexia.Knowledge of visual attributes in the right hemisphere.Relative preservation of 'animate' knowledge in an atypical presentation of herpes simplex virus encephalitis.Naming a giraffe but not an animal: Base-level but not superordinate naming in a patient with impaired semantics.A circumscribed refractory access disorder: A verbal semantic impairment sparing visual semantics.Neural hybrid model of semantic object memory: implications from event-related timing using fMRI.Constraining questions about the organisation and representation of conceptual knowledge.Semantic dementia with category specificity:acomparative case-series study.An attribute is worth more than a category: Testing different semantic memory organisation hy potheses in relation to the living/nonliving things dissociation.Temporally graded semantic memory loss in amnesia and semantic dementia: Further evidence for opposite gradients.The "living things" impairment and the nature of semantic memory organisation: An experimental study using PI-release and semantic cues.Semantic and visual determinants of face recognition in a prosopagnosic patient.Naming without knowing and appearance without associations: evidence for constructive processes in semantic memory?Towards a unitary account of access dysphasia: a single case study.Different patterns of spoken and written word comprehension deficit in aphasic stroke patients.The similarity-in-topography principle: reconciling theories of conceptual deficits.Highly selective category-specific deficits of visual processing at a stage of access to the semantic representation.Standardized stimuli and procedures for investigating the retrieval of lexical and conceptual knowledge for actions.
P2860
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P2860
Multiple meaning systems in the brain: a case for visual semantics.
description
1994 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1994年の論文
@ja
1994年論文
@yue
1994年論文
@zh-hant
1994年論文
@zh-hk
1994年論文
@zh-mo
1994年論文
@zh-tw
1994年论文
@wuu
1994年论文
@zh
1994年论文
@zh-cn
name
Multiple meaning systems in the brain: a case for visual semantics.
@en
type
label
Multiple meaning systems in the brain: a case for visual semantics.
@en
prefLabel
Multiple meaning systems in the brain: a case for visual semantics.
@en
P1433
P1476
Multiple meaning systems in the brain: a case for visual semantics.
@en
P2093
McCarthy RA
Warrington EK
P304
P356
10.1016/0028-3932(94)90118-X
P577
1994-12-01T00:00:00Z